Chinnagounder`s Challenge – The Question of Ecological Citizenship
Autor Deane W. Curtinen Limba Engleză Paperback – 12 sep 2001
When Indian centenarian, Chinnagounder, asked why Deane Curtin about his interest in traditional medicine, especially since he wasn't working for a drug company looking to patent a new discovery, Curtin wondered whether it was possible for the industrialised world to interact with native cultures for reasons other than to exploit them, develop them, and eradicate their traditional practices. The answer, according to Curtin, defines the ethical character of what we typically call "progress." Despite the familiar assertion that we live in a global village, cross cultural environmental and social conflicts are often marked by failures of communication due to deeply divergent assumptions. Such conflicts include the globalisation of trade versus the authority of traditional and indigenous peoples, the need to control population versus the recognition of women as active participants in framing social policy, and the need to preserve nature and the wilderness versus the ever-increasing need for access to land, safe food, and water. Curtin articulates a response to Chinnagounder's challenge in terms of a new, distinctly postcolonial, environmental ethic.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780253213303
ISBN-10: 0253213304
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 145 x 223 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: MH – Indiana University Press
ISBN-10: 0253213304
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 145 x 223 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: MH – Indiana University Press
Cuprins
Part 1. Nature and Culture: Living at the Margins
Turning South; The British Utilitarians and the Invention of the "Third World"; War and Peace: The Politics of Agricultural "Modernization"; Gandhian Legacies: Indigenous Resistance to "Development" in Contemporary India and Mexico; Recognizing Women's Environmental Expertise
Part 2: Radical First World Environmental Philosophy: A New Colonialism?
Callicott's Land Ethic; A State of Mind Like Water: Ecosophy T and the Buddhist Traditions; Ecological Feminism and the Place of Caring
Part 3. Democratic Pluralism
Democractic Discourse in a Morally Pluralistic World; Putting Down Roots: Ecocommunities and the Practice of Freedom
Turning South; The British Utilitarians and the Invention of the "Third World"; War and Peace: The Politics of Agricultural "Modernization"; Gandhian Legacies: Indigenous Resistance to "Development" in Contemporary India and Mexico; Recognizing Women's Environmental Expertise
Part 2: Radical First World Environmental Philosophy: A New Colonialism?
Callicott's Land Ethic; A State of Mind Like Water: Ecosophy T and the Buddhist Traditions; Ecological Feminism and the Place of Caring
Part 3. Democratic Pluralism
Democractic Discourse in a Morally Pluralistic World; Putting Down Roots: Ecocommunities and the Practice of Freedom
Recenzii
" . . . an important contribution to environmental philosophy. . . . includes provocative discussions of institutional and systemic violence, indigenous resistance to "development," the land ethic, deep ecology, ecofeminism, women's ecological knowledge, Jeffersonian agrarian republicanism, Berry's ideas about "principled engagement in community," wilderness advocacy, and the need for an attachment to place." Choice
"This is a very important book, raising serious questions for development theorists and environmentalists alike." Boston Book Review
"This is a very important book, raising serious questions for development theorists and environmentalists alike." Boston Book Review